Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T08:31:23.159Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Coleridge: Friend or Partizan?‐II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The contention that Coleridge’s rejection of Rousseau’s ‘Reason’ as a political principle is based on a deep-seated prejudice can be clearly established if we analyse further the roots of his own political position. Just as his plea for more adequate communication of truth is ultimately a petition for administrative reform, the nature of ‘truth’ itself being analysed at this stage only in terms of the difference between what is self-evident and what must be demonstrated (55f), so his definition of politics is ultimately a reduction to ‘administration’, to how things ‘ought to be managed’ (214). That this conveniently forgets that politics is also about policies, i.e. about morality—a position that Coleridge will otherwise argue for—is clear from the use of the term ‘political’ in his criticism of Cartwright: that he ‘confounds the sufficiency of the conscience to make every person a moral and amenable Being, with the sufficiency of judgment and experience requisite to the exercise of political Right’ (207). This position has its epistemological roots in his distinction between the ‘truths’ of science and the ‘probability’ of facts of experience (158)— a distinction which holds politically, provided one genuinely acknowledges the equal validity of quite different ‘experience’. The practical outcome of Coleridge’s position is a politics which can meet an argument that the expenditure on one naval operation to destroy nine French ships could have provided instead £100 for 2,000 poor families or built a new town in every English county, by the response: ‘These men know that it is not practicable’ (244).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1970 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

page 236 note 1 ‘Cf. Gwyn William,Artisans and Sans‐Culottes;E. P.Thompson,The Making of the English Working Class.

page 236 note 2 At least in The Friend.Coleridge's Notebooks of this period are less positive.

page 237 note 1 Since I have accused Coleridge throughout of ‘prejudice’, perhaps I should remark here that pre‐judice means taking the law for granted. Cf. also privi‐lege.Note too that the fallacy of the notion of ‘negative liberty’ so strong in the liberal tradition (cf. ‘no positive laws’ above) lies in its forgetting that present law is the legitimization of the end‐ term of a prrvious historical process which it takes for granted as legitimate. Coleridge's attitudes to law are more complex than this (cf. his argument against the ‘Antiquarians’, and his Adresses on Sir Robert Peel's Bill,1818) but not, in the result, radically diserent.

page 240 note 1 Cf. S. Ossowski,Class Structure in the Social Consciousness;another Polish thinker is also important in this debate, cf. my review of L. Kolakowski, Marxism and Beyond, New Blackfriars, September,1969.

page 240 note 2 The notion of ‘rights and duties’, linked to it, also seem inadequate to many at present;cf.della Volpe, op.cit.‐‐and Brecht's play,The Caucasian Chalk Circle.